Marcus laughed and snatched the plate from my hand, smearing the sauce with his thumb before walking it out to table nine himself. “My creation,” I heard him announce. “Twenty years of refinement.” I untied my apron slowly. Folded it. Set it on the pass. Then I walked out to the dining room, still in my whites, and stopped beside the investors. “Mr. Hollis,” I said quietly. “Before you sign tomorrow, you should know the duck you just tasted is from a recipe I developed in 2021. So is the black garlic course. So are nine of the twelve dishes on tonight’s tasting menu.” Marcus’s face went purple. “She’s lying. Elena, get back in the kitchen.” I pulled out my phone. “I have every original recipe document, time-stamped, emailed to myself from this restaurant’s server. I have the photos of the prep sheets in my handwriting. I have texts from Marcus asking me to ‘fix’ his menus the night before every critic visit.” Mr. Hollis set down his fork. He looked at Marcus. Then at me. “Chef Elena,” he said carefully, “my group owns three other concepts. We’ve been looking for someone to lead a new flagship in the West End. Would you be available for a conversation Monday morning?” The dining room had gone silent. Marcus grabbed my arm. “You ungrateful little—” “Let go of her.” It was Hollis. Quiet. Final. Marcus let go. I walked back to the kitchen, picked up my knife roll, and said goodbye to my line cooks, who were already clapping. Six months later, Maison Verde lost its star. My new restaurant, Vera, earned one in its first year. Marcus applied for a sous position. I left his email unread.
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